Monday, 31 December 2012

Putin urges unity after year of protests


MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday used a traditional New Year address to call for unity following a year of protests against his return to the Kremlin for a third term.

The country’s “development and fate depend on our enthusiasm and labour, on our unity and responsibility,” ITAR-TASS news agency quoted Putin as saying in the televised message aired first in Russia’s Far East.

“Only together can we, the people of Russia, advance steadily, cope with any trials, solve the most complicated tasks, build a strong, successful state, a modern, prosperous and free society,” said Putin.

Russia was rocked by its largest post-Soviet protests in response to Putin’s decision to seek the presidency again following a 2000-2008 spell in power in which the state cracked down on civil liberties and media rights. The former KGB spy served as prime minister for four years under his hand-picked presidential successor Dmitry Medvedev before announcing in September 2011 that the two had agreed to a job swap.

Putin then won March elections and was sworn in as president in May. His inauguration was preceded by violent protests outside the Kremlin and was followed by the adoption of laws further restricting Russians’s right to join demonstrations not authorised by the state.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Design by Free WordPress and Blogger Themes | Flash File | latest news | Tutorials | Blogger Tips